
Smartphone Overuse Linked to Gray-Matter Reduction and Brain Connectivity Shifts
A comprehensive neuroimaging review finds problematic smartphone use is associated with structural and functional brain alterations in reward processing, executive control, and social cognition networks. Reduced gray matter in insular, anterior cingulate, and orbitofrontal regions, plus altered frontostriatal and frontolimbic connectivity, accompany heightened brain responses to phone cues in reward circuits. Social factors like fear of missing out modulate neural responses, suggesting smartphones reinforce habits via social feedback. The authors frame findings within the I-PACE model and stress the need for longitudinal studies, while cautioning that normal smartphone use should not be pathologized.